Key Takeaways
- My Hero Academia has eight OVAs and they are mostly good.
- "Training of the Dead" might be the funniest thing to come from the anime, and "Departure" stuns despite a short runtime.
- Overall, the OVAs are enjoyable but rarely achieve their full potential.
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Seven seasons strong, with an eighth and final on the way, My Hero Academia’s road has been a long one, paved with some incredible storytelling and unforgettable characters, all with very little filler along the way. However, apart from the anime-original films that have graced theaters around the globe, Studio Bones has also produced several OVAs throughout the series' run, some of which have never been available to stream.
Since the anime began in Spring 2016, there have been eight OVAs (Original Video Animations) produced by Studio Bones, either as extensions of the TV anime or tie-ins to the theatrical films. At times, they’ve been adaptations of supplementary material, but a lot of the time, they’ve been completely original stories that play around with some fun ideas and thrive on character interactions.
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10 Best Anime OVAs, Ranked
OVA anime are few and far between, but when done right, they can be brilliant to watch. These are some of the best.
The Anime’s First-Ever OVAs
Save! Rescue Training!
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Director | Kenji Nagasaki |
Release Date | 11/27/2016 (Jump Festa) |
Available to Stream? | No |
It’s a weird sensation watching the first-ever My Hero Academia OVA because it magnifies how much the show has changed, in ways both nostalgic and a bit sobering. On one hand, it’s cute seeing the students of Class 1-A back when they were still getting to know each other. On the other hand, though, that means reliving characters like Bakugo and Mineta at their most irritating.
Set after the incident at the end of Season 1, “Save! Rescue Training!” follows Class 1-A resuming their training at the simulation facility to make up for their previous session being interrupted. Unfortunately, the OVA feels like a cheaper version of concepts that would later appear in the main story, such as the class learning the importance of how to deal with civilians during a rescue. There’s not enough here to justify hunting down the OVA for a watch.
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VERDICT: NOT RECOMMENDED
Training of the Dead!
Director | Kenji Nagasaki |
Release Date | 6/2/2017 |
Source Material | Bonus Chapter 1 (Only Tsuyu’s prologue) |
Available to Stream? | No |
The very start of this OVA adapts a bonus chapter that explores Tsuyu’s family background and her friendship with Habuko Mongoose, a girl with a snake-like appearance. It’s adorable and sets up a completely original story wherein Class 1-A participates in a survival exercise alongside students from Isamu Academy, where Habuko goes. Things take a turn when one of Isamu’s students activates a quirk that turns people into zombies.
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After an underwhelming OVA beforehand, this one was quite fun. The team behind the movie My Hero Academia: Two Heroes ramped up the comedy for this episode thanks to creative quirks on behalf of new heroes and just solid character interactions across the board. It felt like an episode of Angel Beats or some other classic comedy with moments of chaotic absurdity.
VERDICT: HIGHLY RECOMMENDED
Short and Sweet or Long and Boring
All Might Rising
Director | Kenji Nagasaki (Presumed) |
Release Date | 2/13/2019 |
Source Material | All Might Rising (One-shot) |
Available to Stream? | No |
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There’s not much to be said about “All Might Rising” and that’s because it’s short - like, under three minutes short. It’s based on a one-shot that was handed out to viewers who went to see Two Heroes, and frankly, if it had to be animated, it should have just been tacked on to the intro of the movie in the first place. It briefly recounts All Might’s journey from the moment he lost his master to when he left for America to get stronger. Powerful imagery, but otherwise nothing that couldn’t already be inferred.
VERDICT: NOT ESSENTIAL
Make It! Do-or-Die Survival Training
Director | Masahiro Mukai, Kenji Nagasaki (Chief Director) |
Release Date | 8/16/2020 |
Available to Stream? | Crunchyroll |
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Sometimes, in modern shōnen, fans disparage the slower parts of a story as “filler” without considering if what perturbs them is actually filler. “Make It! Do-or-Die Survival Training” is what My Hero Academia’s haters think the regular show is like. Similar to “Save! Rescue Training!”, it feels sort of pointless because it’s just a precursor to another similar arc in the main story. Worse than that, it feels like the writing and the performances completely phone it in.
If I didn’t know any better, I’d suspect this was made as a supplementary work to introduce these characters to new viewers who couldn’t be bothered to watch previous seasons before jumping in. As it happens, this two-part OVA is based on a drama skit performed live in 2018. It just ends up feeling drawn out and any traces of clever ideas are few and far between an otherwise unimpressive story.
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VERDICT: NOT RECOMMENDED
Departure
Director | N/A |
Release Date | 2/16/2022 |
Source Material | Hawks: Soothe (Volume World Heroes) |
Available to Stream? | No |
Similar to “All Might Rising”, this one is short, but it’s honestly worth every second for how great it looks, with Animator Yuki Hayashi stealing the show. His use of perspective and his playful warping of the character designs yield some extremely entertaining comedy. It’s a short comedy sketch that is overflowing with great animation and goes to show what a strong talent Hayashi is (See for yourself).
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VERDICT: HIGHLY RECOMMENDED
The Baseball Episode That Wasn’t, and Other Oddities
HLB - Hero League Baseball
Director | Masahiro Mukai, Kenji Nagasaki (Chief Director) |
Release Date | 6/16/2022 |
Available to Stream? | Crunchyroll |
It’s a baseball episode, folks, and similar to a beach episode, there are only two types of people: those who love them and those who will skip them. Personally, I loved it. The narrative is exactly what one should expect, but the animation is on point, and it’s refreshing to see an OVA where none of the main characters star in it, which brings out the best in the supporting cast.
VERDICT: IT’S A BASEBALL EPISODE (DO WITH THAT WHAT YOU WILL)
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Laugh! As If You Are in Hell
Director | Masahiro Mukai, Kenji Nagasaki (Chief Director) |
Release Date | 6/16/2022 |
Available to Stream? | Crunchyroll |
Conceptually, this might be the most interesting OVA yet. A mysterious villain is vandalizing property but no one can apprehend him because his quirk causes a paralyzing fit of laughter. What drives the heroes to intensify their hunt is nothing but petty revenge. A low-stakes story for sure, but a cute one nonetheless, that experiments with some creative action concepts, like Bakugo fighting while blindfolded.
VERDICT: RECOMMENDED
UA Heroes Battle
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Director | Tsuyoshi Tobita |
Release Date | 10/20/2023 |
Available to Stream? | Crunchyroll |
When the students find themselves sequestered in their dorms during Winter Break, Togata arrives with a new invention from the Support Course: a card game based around the Hero Course students. By placing a character’s card down, the game board creates a virtual battle. This might have produced some cool “what if” fights had it not been for each student having those obnoxious bug eyes inside the game. There are interesting ideas, but they’re surrounded by lackluster comedy and a premise that can’t quite carry a full episode.
VERDICT: NOT RECOMMENDED
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With that, My Hero Academia’s OVAs are generally more good than bad, but they never go as far as they could and arguably should. Contrary to the movies, where Studio Bones lets loose and experiments with crazy spectacle and original ideas, these bonus episodes and shorts fall short of their potential to expand on and elevate the work of the series. Even so, it would be nice to see Bones continue to produce OVAs, even after the anime is finished.
My Hero Academia is now streaming on Crunchyroll.
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My Hero Academia Season 7: Peak Fiction
With solid directing, impeccable artwork, and generational feats of adaptive flair, Season 7 is My Hero Academia at its absolute best.
2
My Hero Academia
Action
Superhero
- Release Date
- April 3, 2016
- Seasons
- 7
- Studio
- Bones
- Based On
- Manga
- Creator
- Kōhei Horikoshi
- Number of Episodes
- 159
- Streaming Service(s)
- Crunchyroll , Hulu